case eth1). In this point I want to mention that in the output of
tcpdump I never saw the header for the retrive of the email message from
the client(Workstation) to the server, nevertheless the conection to
Internet is working fine.
2. I also stop my firewall because may be a misconfiguration of the
firewall can block my email, but even without firewall, it crash.
3. I installed a pop3 and smtp proxies, and get them run as an inetd
service, but without sucess. I mean the proxy run but can retrieve email
from workstation.
4. Finally I had this configuration working with SuSE the problem is that I
do not know exactly how I did it.
At this point I hope some one of you can help me or tell me what I am doing
wrong. Or tell me whatever documentation where I can get an answer.
Regards
Sergio B.J
____________________________________________________
Scripting languages compared
Sun, 13 Jun 2004 08:34:47 +0100
Jimmy O'Regan ([27]The LG Answer Gang)
[Jimmy O'Regan]
[28]http://merd.sourceforge.net/pixel/language-study/scripting-langua
ge
sh wins, closely followed by Perl and Ruby.
Read that backwards, in terms of winning order and: \o/ -- Thomas
Well, he's wrong about "sh" not having a debugger, particularly since he's
using Bash; "-x" certainly fits the bill. Step-by-step execution, no, but
I think that would go under "full interpreter in debugger".
As to his length comparisons for different programs - certainly in regard
to Perl - he had me cracking up. E.g., the Perl entry for 'env' has his
actual home directory name spelled out...
The rest of it, I'm afraid, demonstrates his lack of knowledge of the
several languages I can vouch for rather than being an accurate comparison
of any sort (he did mostly OK with "sh", though. :) -- Ben
Ok, it's your chance, gentle readers. Would anyone like to take a more
thorough and in-depth view about how the languages compare? We come not to
flame Caesar, but to praise him... code samples maybe, but a fair
treatment is called for at the very least. -- Heather
_________________________________________________________________
GENERAL MAIL
_________________________________________________________________
* [29]Compliments to you all.
* [30]Re: Dual "Linux Gazette"?
* [31]Re: Foolish things....
* [32]Re: Linux Gazette Redux :)
* [33]Linux Gazette article in issue 103
* [34]linuxgazette.net down......
____________________________________________________
Compliments to you all.
Fri, 4 Jun 2004 13:15:18 +0100
Steve Brown ([35]sp_brown from hotmail.com)
Hi there,
I've just finished reading some of the June issue, I got the feeling that
you are all a little dejected - don't be! You all produce a fantastic read,
absolutely superb - much better than that other one (I did write and tell
them they were crap, but they didn't reply funnily enough).
Thanks, Steve. I don't know that I'd call it dejection - it's more of a
realization of a lot of work ahead, at least for me. Given that I enjoy
it, though, that's no bad thing. -- Ben
I used to use an Amiga (still own it sans powerpack) and I spent hours and
hours learing to program in C (very very simple stuff), shell scripts and
the like. I loved the learning process and the usability of it all. I was
forced into buying a PC (following the demise of the power pack) and it
came complete with Win95, what a nightmare -I couldn't find out how any of
it worked without paying for the information one way or another. Then I came
across Mandrake 8, actually I was desperately looking for something other
than Windows, and my little world changed. All the information I could ever
want and then some.
One of my earliest discoveries was your good selves. My favourite Amiga mag
was Amiga Shopper - a good mix of basic newbie stuff and more advanced
information - programming, how the machine works and so on. It pandered to
my newbie needs and as I grew in knowledge so I gained even more from the
magazine.
Your magazine offers something similar, a good mix without pandering too
much to the total newbie. So many magazines seem to offer a three monthly
cycle of tutorials with little new material.
I was actually considering recycling a bit of our previous material. Jim
Dennis' "Routing 101" is an evergreen that can definitely stand to be
=2= |